Tag Archives: Umbraco

Umbraco is a Content Management System (CMS) built on legacy ASP .NET (i.e. not .NET Core, and therefore Windows-only). A couple of months ago, version 8 was released, with breaking changes and some new features. In this article, we’ll see how to quickly get up and running with Umbraco 8.0.1 and Visual Studio Code.

Downloading Umbraco

The first thing to do is grab the Umbraco starter kit from the download page. At the time of writing this article, the latest version is 8.0.1.

The download link and installation guide link are shown in this screenshot.

Beneath the download link, there’s another link to the installation guide, which are mainly the steps we’ll be following in this article (despite the warning that it may not be updated for v8). Unfortunately, the “getting started” link further below (not shown in the screenshot above) is broken.

After downloading the Umbraco zip file, extract it to a folder of your choice.

Running Umbraco with Visual Studio Code

Visual Studio Code is a recent (compared to Visual Studio) cross-platform Integrated Development Environment (IDE) developed by Microsoft, and can often be used as a replacement for Visual Studio. Download Visual Studio Code if you don’t have it already.

Use the menu or the start page to “Open Folder…” and locate the directory where you extracted Umbraco.

After running Visual Studio Code, use its “Open folder…” option (via the start page or the file menu) to locate the folder where you extracted Umbraco to.

To install the IIS Express extension for Visual Studio: first, access the Extensions tab via the box-like icon on the left. Then, search for IIS Express, and select the relevant result when it comes up. Finally, hit the Install button.

Then, install the IIS Express extension for Visual Studio Code by following the steps illustrated in the above screenshot.

With that done, hit Ctrl+F5 to run the website. Be patient, as it may take a little while to load the first time.

PageInspector.Loader Assembly Issue

“Could not load file or assembly ‘Microsoft.VisualStudio.Web.PageInspector.Loader, Version=1.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b03f5f7f11d50a3a’ or one of its dependencies. The system cannot find the file specified.“

If you also have Visual Studio 2019 installed, then you might run into a problem that displays the above error instead of the website.

If this happens, locate the C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\VisualStudio\Packages\Microsoft.VisualStudio.AspNetDiagnosticPack.Msi,version=16.0.12311.10635 directory, run AspNetDiagnosticPack.msi, and hit Repair. After running the website again, it should work.

Installing Umbraco 8

After a little wait, the site should load and you should see the setup wizard:

The first page of the Umbraco setup wizard.

In the first screen (shown above), you give it your name, email address and a password. Then, you can choose whether to hit Install (which installs Umbraco with default settings, including an SQL Server Compact Edition (SQLCE) database), or else Customize and choose the options you want for the setup.

The installation itself will also take a while, but when that’s done, you’ll be redirected to the Umbraco CMS (which you can reach at any time via the /umbraco URL).

The login screen of the Umbraco CMS.

You can log in using the credentials that you supplied during the setup.

A first peek at the Umbraco 8 CMS: menu, navigation, content, and a tour.

At this point, you can go ahead and start creating content. As you do this, you’ll see your changes reflected in the Umbraco Sample Site, which you can access by going to the root (/) of the website URL.